Looking to buy a new laptop, ACER likes & dislikes

That's weird. I was just going to post the same question. I'm looking to get a new laptop too.

I was thinking about this Acer...
http://www.amazon.com/Acer-AS7741G-7017-17-3-Inch-Laptop-Black/dp/B003ZUXX1K

They have it at newegg.com and walmart too. It seems really inexpensive for what you get.

But Dell just came out with a new line of XPS laptops.
The XPS 15 got a very good review from PC Mag.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2372137,00.asp
1080p High def screen. High def web cam. And an amazing sound system.

I'm still waiting for more actual user reviews. Also waiting to see what laptops are going on sale during black friday. But most have older processors and I need at least an Intel Core i5 or faster.

http://www.blackfriday.info/
 
I have a Dell Studio 1737 laptop and love it. Not impressed with HP any more...that icludes laptops, printers and PCs. Used to like them but they seem to have gone south. Everything is Dell now besides a Mac. I agree with Wizard...if just surfing it may suit your needs, but who knows what you may need it for a year from now. I would at least go middle of the road.
 
Wow I still have my 2001 HP Pavilion zx5000 with Windows XP and it still works great mostly becasue I dont upload and therefore load down the original operating system with the huge OS updates MS always wants you to include so they can monitor and sell your every move. Its not nearly as fast as my 2005 HP desktop AMD 64 Dual 4400, but I also kept OS Vista it stripped down and it works faster then some recent desktops I have used that are over-bloated with OS junk. If you don't buy into all the OS bells & whistles and pare down the OS to basic essentials and scrutinize propitiatory updates, A PC should work fast and effectively without glitches for 10 years, bar any hardware issues.

Also consider that with is recession their are some real used bargains out there. people are given late model (1-2 year old) laptops away for 1/4 the price. Im retired and not a manager anymore so its important to consider your true needs and use. Obviously if your a mover and shaker you need top-notch performance, but if your not and just want a lap top like everyone else, there are allot of used bargains out there.
 
Pet, I had an Acer for years, and loved it! I used it for watching movies, downloading music, ( even for some instances of my photography) .

I agree with the get what you pay for thing, however, some of the better model Acers, are well worth it, and I have always had pleasant fast service with Acer.
 
We love our Acer, it is three years old and going strong. It isn't fancy but it is very reliable. We use it a lot daily, for work and browsing and my son and husband play games on it.
It has stood up to the rigors of a busy family quite well, this thing has fallen off the desk several times, and even fell out of the back of my explorer onto concrete with zero scratches or anything.

The charger that came with it was very cheaply made and we broke two of those before buying a less expensive but better quality one off of amazon.

We have had nothing but problems with dell, both desktops and laptops, won't buy from them again, ever.
 
IME, acer, dell, hp, compaq, lenovo, toshiba, etc. (all the common names that usually come to a consumers mind) are all typically hit or miss. while IT folks were complaining years back about compaq computers the only problems i was having fixing compaq laptops were end-user related, not the fault of the company or pc itself. prices were rock bottom in comparison to other mfgr's so it was a steal and a safe bet, IMO.

a big reason for hit or miss IME is bloatware... mfgr's trying to alter the processes to fit their needs... for example, trying to solve all your problems, therefore constantly reporting to the web the state your pc is in (i had a huge problem that rendered several end-users dead in the water with this issue from dell pc's for a long while... dell bloatware is usually horrendous)... another example... extending battery life by constantly monitoring processes and rendering them silent... this is a common one... it looks good on the package when pc "a" has almost twice the battery life of pc "b" that boast the same stats at comparable prices. however, IME this form of control itself is hit or miss in most cases.

however... 2 names stand out like shining stars IME and from my knowledge. ASUS and MSI are industry leaders that build quality products that stand the test of time and have won more awards than any other manufacturers in recent history. asus is always my number one recommendation... especially for longevity and performance on a budget. i'll be more than happy to pay the extra $50 for the ASUS name every time....

one problem i find is a very common issue with budget pc's... they don't come with a re-install disk... then they add bloatware that eventually causes incompatibilities that render the pc useless if you install the wrong thing or wind up with a bug. not a bad issue since usually there's a backup partition... but when the backup partition fails, you're stuck with a $400-$700 (or more) square frisbee. the real problem is the end-user letting the problem get too deep to fix and thus this can usually be avoided... however most folks let it go til things are too far beyond repair. this is one major reason why most of the folks i know who have changed platforms were forced to. their pc's no longer worked, their hdd was corrupted, their pc wouldn't boot into windows to access their backup partition and we were forced to buy another copy of windows or find an alternative... so most of them are running ubuntu, now.

so, to recap i would suggest;
acer first
msi second
if you go with another brand make sure there's a re-install disk or that your system gives you the option to make your own (most of the compaq's i've set up have had me make the disks myself) not a single acer or toshiba i've set up have either had the disk or had an option to make one. they're all running linux instead of what they came with, now...
 
Okay, I have worked for a major electronics retailer for over 4 years. Toshiba is built cheap as hell these days, Acer isnt worth the plastic its made out of, Sony are okay but way overpriced for what they are, HP used to be good but as they are getting cheaper each year they are having more and more issues, Asus are pretty good, and Apple is the best. I know what everyones going to say, Apple is overpriced and too proprietary etc etc, which is the same kind of crap I used to say back in the day. After my HP motherboard took a dump about 2 years ago, my friend let me have his iBook from 2003. It worked just as fast as my year old HP and had none of the virus/spam/slowness issues you normally get with a PC. I eventually dropped it one too many times and I had to replace it due to a broken backlight. I replaced it with a 13.3" Macbook Pro and it is the best thing.
 
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